“The Lord himself
goes before you and will be with you;
he will never leave
you nor forsake you. Do not be
afraid; do not be
discouraged.”
Deuteronomy 31:8
(NIV)
“Mommy, come!” I heard the little voice call.
My two-year old son had an answer ready each time I walked in his room and said
“What do you need, sweetie?”
A drink. His blankie. A hug.
Another hug. Just one more song.
After several
evenings of him calling repeatedly and my going to his crib, I knew something
had to change. I had tried reminding him with each request that he already had
a drink of water and his blankie was in his bed with him; that we had hugged
three times and sung two extra songs.
But nothing
worked. He continued to repeat “Mommy, come!” again and again and again as soon
as I left his room.
My husband and I
realized that our son really didn’t need another drink or song or hug. He
simply needed to be sure that, in the darkness of the night when he could not
see us, we were still close by. So we decided on a nighttime routine.
When it was time
for bed, we carried our little one into his bedroom, prayed over him, hugged
him and whispered “Night night. Mommy and Daddy are going to bed, too. We love
you. See you in the morning,” and smiled as we shut his door.
And, even though
it was extremely hard, we did not go back in when we heard that precious voice
calling. Of course we were still listening. Of course we peeked into his room
after he fell asleep. Of course we were always there, even though he couldn’t
see or hear us during the night.
But he needed to
learn to trust that, even though we didn’t come the second he called, we would
come. And he did.
In the morning,
when I heard that sweet “Mommy, come!” I could not wait to open the door and
sweep him up in my arms and say “Here I am!” as I covered him with hugs and
kisses.
We are a lot
like my son, aren’t we? The “darkness” of a job loss or a crisis in marriage or
a prodigal child or an illness hits and we panic when our Father does not fix
everything immediately when we call.
And the silence?
The horrible silence? We often panic and mistake the silence from God as His
not caring or hearing and we wrestle with fear of the unknown and
discouragement.
But look at
today’s Scripture. The Lord tells us that he will always go before us, no
matter what journey we are on and he will never – repeat – never leave
us. He is there, in the silence, loving us enough to teach us to trust Him with
our very lives; knowing that we must learn that His timing is always perfect.
We need to
remember that no matter what we are facing, the God of the Universe is still
beside us, listening and loving. Even though we don’t see Him. Even though we
don’t hear Him.
I encourage you
to hold on through the night. That’s when we learn to trust that our Father has
not left us. He is near. He is watching over us. Even in the silence.
Father, help me to trust that you will never
leave me, whether it’s in the darkest night or light of day. In Jesus’ Name.
Amen.
R.A.P. it up . . .
Reflect
- Have
you ever felt like God was far away and did not hear you when you called
on Him?
- Were
you filled with fear and panic or did you trust the Lord?
Application
- Journal
and memorize today’s Key Scripture.
- When
you struggle with fear, say Deuteronomy 31:8 aloud, placing “me” in place of
“you” in the Scripture. Then thank Him for His faithfulness.
Power Verses
- Deuteronomy
31:8 (NIV) “The Lord himself goes before you and will be with you; he will
never leave you nor forsake you. Do not be afraid; do not be discouraged.”
- Psalm
116:2 (NIV) “Because he turned his ear to me, I will call on him as long
as I live.”
- Psalm
77:2 (NIV) “When I was in distress, I sought the Lord; at night I
stretched out untiring hands and my soul refused to be comforted.”
- Psalm
147:9 (NIV) “He provides food for the cattle and for the young ravens when
they call.”
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